Netgear DGND3700v1 [English]: DGND3700 User Manual (PDF) - Page 76

Share Photos with Friends and Family, Store Files in a Central Location for Printing

Page 76 highlights

N600 Wireless Dual Band Gigabit ADSL2+ Modem Router DGND3700 • Sharing multimedia with friends and family. You can share MP3 files, pictures, and other multimedia with local and remote users. • Sharing resources on your network. Store files in a central location so that you do not have to power up a computer to perform local sharing. In addition, you can share files between Macintosh, Linux, and PC computers by using the USB drive as a go-between. • Sharing files with offsite coworkers. Share files such as Word documents, PowerPoint presentations, and text files with remote users. A few common uses are described in the following sections. Share Photos with Friends and Family You can create your own central storage location for photos and multimedia. This eliminates the need to log in to (and pay for) an external photo-sharing site.  To share files with your friends and family: 1. Insert your USB drive into the USB port on the wireless modem router either directly or with a USB cable. Computers on your local area network (LAN) can access this USB drive using a web browser or Microsoft Networking. 2. If you want to specify read-only access, or to allow access from the Internet, see Configure USB Storage Advanced Settings on page 80. Store Files in a Central Location for Printing This scenario is for a family that has one high-quality color printer directly attached to a PC, but not shared on the local area network (LAN). This family does not have a print server: • The family's color printer is directly attached to the mother's PC. • The daughter has some photos on her Macintosh computer that she wants to print. • Their computers are not visible to each other on the network.  To print her photos on the color printer: 1. The daughter types \\readyshare in the address field of her web browser. This gives her access to the USB drive in the router. 2. She copies the photos from the Mac to the router USB drive. 3. The mother uses a her web browser or Microsoft Networking to transfer the files from the USB drive to her PC. Then she prints the files. Share Large Files with Colleagues Sending files larger than 5 MB can pose a problem for many e-mail systems. The router allows you to share very large files such as PowerPoint presentations or .zip files with USB Storage 76

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USB Storage
76
N600 Wireless Dual Band Gigabit ADSL2+ Modem Router DGND3700
Sharing multimedia with friends and family. You can share MP3 files, pictures, and other
multimedia with local and remote users.
Sharing resources on your network. Store files in a central location so that you do not
have to power up a computer to perform local sharing. In addition, you can share files
between Macintosh, Linux, and PC computers by using the USB drive as a go-between.
Sharing files with offsite coworkers. Share files such as Word documents, PowerPoint
presentations, and text files with remote users.
A few common uses are described in the following sections.
Share Photos with Friends and Family
You can create your own central storage location for photos and multimedia. This eliminates
the need to log in to (and pay for) an external photo-sharing site.
To share files with your friends and family:
1.
Insert your USB drive into the USB port on the wireless modem router either directly or
with a USB cable.
Computers on your local area network (LAN) can access this USB drive using a web
browser or Microsoft Networking.
2.
If you want to specify read-only access, or to allow access from the Internet, see
Configure
USB Storage Advanced Settings
on page
80.
Store Files in a Central Location for Printing
This scenario is for a family that has one high-quality color printer directly attached to a PC,
but not shared on the local area network (LAN). This family does not have a print server:
The family’s color printer is directly attached to the mother’s PC.
The daughter has some photos on her Macintosh computer that she wants to print.
Their computers are not visible to each other on the network.
To print her photos on the color printer:
1.
The daughter types
\\readyshare
in the address field of her web browser.
This gives her access to the USB drive in the router.
2.
She copies the photos from the Mac to the router USB drive.
3.
The mother uses a her web browser or Microsoft Networking to transfer the files from the
USB drive to her PC. Then she prints the files.
Share Large Files with Colleagues
Sending files larger than 5 MB can pose a problem for many e-mail systems. The router
allows you to share very large files such as PowerPoint presentations or .zip files with